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All hearing aids are amplifiers, but the expensive in-ear ones are also microcomputers which select different levels of amplification for sound on different wavelengths and can be adjusted to compensate specifically for the wavelengths that the individual's own hearing has lost. You are getting some very clever technology for your money, but it's money down the drain if the job hasn't been done completely. There is more to hearing than making sound loud enough.
For hearing aids to work to their maximum potential, you need:
a motivated wearer
a conscientious audiologist or technician
supportive communicators helping the wearer
time
practice
a practical understanding of what is happening in a) the environment; b) the gizmo; c) the ear; d) the brain.
As my kind and insightful cousin pointed out to me, putting in a hearing aid is not like putting on a pair of glasses, it's far more like switching on increasingly bright lights. At first the aids don't bring sound into focus, they just make it louder: this is why wearers often find them incredibly uncomfortable and stop wearing them. Just think how many millions of dollars are sitting in little boxes at people's bedsides!
Because older people and their caregivers can often be somewhat pessimistic about the whole project, they tend not to read the instructions and not to follow their providers' directions about re-training the person's hearing. It is very hard work, it is fiddly and laborious and often disappointing at first, and they're not convinced they'll get good results. So they spend the money almost as a grand gesture, and then give up.
It's also often left too late: people resist getting their hearing tested and resist having to wear aids. By the time they do, they face an uphill struggle to restore worthwhile function and of course it's true that sometimes it simply won't be possible. [I'm guilty myself. Having been driven round the bend by both parents' deafness I did swear that I would get my hearing checked at 55 whether or not I had any problems. I'm now 58 and still planning to "get round to it."]
I'm currently reading David Eagleman's book "Livewired" subtitled "the inside story of the ever-changing brain" which includes a pacy section on how the brain responds to inputs by devoting more "territory" to richer sources. The relevance of this is that as hearing weakens (so you get less audio input), the brain gives less and less territory and attention to sound as an information source: i.e. you get worse at hearing. Increase the sound and you don't get immediate improvement because the neural pathways for hearing are disused and overgrown - you have to rebuild them, and that's what takes the time, effort and discipline, daily exercises in active listening, increasing in length every day.
Is it worth it? Well, yes. If nothing else, it gives the person something constructive and positive to do, and the rewards can be made very concrete - e.g. enjoying a favourite piece of music, joining in a song, listening to a loved one's voice.
On the other hand. If you are in your nineties and very tired, I think you are also entitled to think "nuts to it. I tried" and ask people to write stuff down instead.
Eventually my mom wouldn't wear her hearing aids, and I'd swear she heard better without them because we just had to get closer to her to speak, thus eliminating the extra noise.
I am the same when trying to hear the TV on a windy night. Headphones instead of increased volume seems to work.
I have been a one aid wearer for almost two decades. I never had a problem even after I underwent tympanomastoidectomy surgery in that ear.